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Trump news at a glance: Lutnick threatens Harvard patents; former Fox commentator bound for UN | Trump administration

The Trump administrations has threatened Harvard’s lucrative portfolio of patents amid its long-running dispute with the university, accusing it of breaching legal and contractual requirements tied to federally funded research.
In a letter, commerce secretary Howard Lutnick demanded that Harvard provide within four weeks a list of all patents stemming from federally funded research grants, including how the patents are used and whether any licensing requires “substantial US manufacturing”. Harvard did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
Many civil rights experts, faculty and White House critics believe the Trump administration’s targeting of schools for supposedly failing to address antisemitism on campus is a pretext to assert federal control and threaten academic freedom and free speech.
Trump administration threatens Harvard federal funding and patents
In his letter to Harvard, Lutnick also said the commerce department had begun a “march-in” process under the federal Bayh-Dole Act that could let the government take ownership of the patents or grant licenses.
As of 1 July 2024, Harvard held more than 5,800 patents, and had more than 900 technology licenses with over 650 industry partners, according to the Harvard Office of Technology Development.
Tammy Bruce nominated for US deputy ambassador to UN
Donald Trump said on Saturday he was nominating former Fox News commentator Tammy Bruce as the next US deputy representative to the United Nations.
Bruce has been serving as the chief spokesperson for the state department since Trump took office this year. Trump said Bruce, who had no prior foreign policy experience before becoming spokesperson in January, “will represent our country brilliantly at the United Nations”.
IRS commissioner reportedly removed over immigration policy dispute
The removal of the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) commissioner Billy Long after just two months came after the federal tax collection agency said it could not release some information on taxpayers suspected of being in the US illegally, it was reported on Saturday.
The Washington Post reported the Department of Homeland Security had sent the IRS a list of 40,000 names that it suspected of being in the country illegally. DHS asked the tax service to crosscheck confidential taxpayer data to verify their addresses.
The IRS reportedly responded that it was able to verify fewer than 3% of the names on the DHS list, but declined requests for further information, citing taxpayer privacy rights.
‘We are at war – bring it on’: Democrats ready to fight dirty to stop Trump
Ken Martin, chair of the Democratic National Committee, speaking in Chicago this week, said: “This is a new Democratic party. We’re bringing a knife to a knife fight, and we are going to fight fire with fire.”
It was a brutally honest acknowledgement of what a decade of Donald Trump’s politics has wrought. Out go the courtly and courteous playing-by-the-rules Democrats convinced that Maga is a passing phase, a fever that will break. In come a new generation of pugnacious Democrats prepared to take off the gloves and fight dirty.
The trigger for this scorched-earth approach is Trump’s push to find more Republican seats in the House of Representatives ahead of next year’s crucial midterm elections through gerrymandering, a process of manipulating electoral maps to benefit one party over another.
How did we get all this gerrymandering? A brief history
Extreme GOP gerrymanders have remade American politics over the last 15 years. They have locked Republicans into office in state legislatures nationwide, even in purple states when Democratic candidates win more votes. They have delivered a reliable and enduring edge to the GOP in the race for Congress.
How did we get here? How did gerrymandered lines, rather than voters, gain the power to determine winners and losers?
Pete Hegseth reposts video that says women shouldn’t be allowed to vote
The US defense secretary, Pete Hegseth, recently shared a video in which several pastors say women should no longer be allowed to vote, prompting one progressive evangelical organization to express concern.
Hegseth reposted a nearly seven-minute report CNN segment on X on Thursday that focuses on pastor Doug Wilson, a Christian nationalist. In the segment, he raises the idea of women not voting.
Doug Pagitt, a pastor and the executive director of the progressive evangelical organization Vote Common Good, said the ideas in the video were views that “small fringes of Christians keep” and said it was “very disturbing” that Hegseth would amplify them.
Under-fire FDA figure returns just days after leaving
Vinay Prasad is returning to his role overseeing vaccine, gene therapy and blood product regulation at the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) a little more than a week after he left the agency.
Two days before Prasad stepped down last month, Laura Loomer, a far-right influencer and conspiracy theorist, had released misleadingly edited audio to suggest Prasad had admitted sticking pins in a Trump voodoo doll, when the full audio made it clear that he was talking about the kind of thing an imagined liberal Trump-hater would do.
Prasad is an oncologist who was a fierce critic of US Covid-19 vaccines and mask mandates.
What else happened today:
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A Georgia man who opened fire on the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in Atlanta on Friday, killing a police officer, had blamed a Covid-19 vaccine for making him depressed and suicidal, a law enforcement official said.
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Documents filed recently in the New Orleans Roman Catholic archdiocese’s five-year bankruptcy case provide more clarity on how claims will be doled out to survivors of clergy abuse if a proposed settlement is approved.
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Louisiana prison chosen for immigration detainees due to its notoriety, says Noem | US immigration

The Trump administration purposefully chose a notorious Louisiana prison to hold immigration detainees as a way to encourage people in the US illegally to self-deport, Department of Homeland Security (DHS) secretary Kristi Noem said Wednesday.
A complex inside the Louisiana state penitentiary, an immense rural prison better known as Angola, will be used to detain those whom Noem described as the “worst of the worst” Immigration and Customs Enforcement (Ice) detainees. Noem was speaking to reporters as she stood on the grounds of the facility near a new sign reading, “Louisiana Lockup.”
“This facility will hold the most dangerous of criminals,” Noem said, adding it had “absolutely” been chosen for its reputation.
Officials said 51 detainees were already being housed at Angola. But Louisiana governor Jeff Landry said he expects the building to be filled to capacity, expecting over 400 people to come in ensuing months, as president Donald Trump continues his large-scale attempt to remove millions of people suspected of entering the country illegally.
The dirt road to the new Ice facility meanders past lofty oak trees, green fields and other buildings – including a white church and a structure with a sign that says, “Angola Shake Down Team”.
The facility is surrounded by a fence with five rows of stacked barbed wire. Overlooking the outdoor area is a tower, where a guard paced back and forth.
At the prison entrance a sign reads: “You are entering the land of new beginnings.”
The Associated Press joined officials for a brief tour of the facility, viewing some of the cells where detainees would be held. The cells, built of three cinder block walls and steel bars on the front, were single occupancy – one bed, toilet and sink in each.
Outside were confined enclosures of chain-link fencing, tall enough for multiple people to stand in.
“If you don’t think that they belong in somewhere like this,” Landry said of the detainees during Wednesday’s news conference, “you’ve got a problem.”
The building holding Ice detainees is not new, but rather refurbished after sitting vacant for years. The rest of Angola, which is made up of many buildings, has remained active. Many of Angola’s 6,300 inmates still work the fields, picking long rows of vegetables by hand as armed guards patrol on horseback.
In addition, the prison is home to more than 50 death row inmates. The most recent execution was in March, using nitrogen gas to deprive the inmate of oxygen, causing death. The state’s electric chair, nicknamed “Gruesome Gertie”, is still on display in the prison’s museum.
The notoriety of the 18,000-acre (7,300-hectare) prison stretches back well over a century. Described in the 1960s and 1970s as “the bloodiest prison in America,” it has seen violence, mass riots, escapes, brutality, inhumane conditions and executions.
The Trump administration has crafted its immigration messaging to reinforce a tough-on-crime image and create a sense of fear among people in the US illegally, most pointedly with the detention center dubbed Alligator Alcatraz that it built in the Florida Everglades.
The Everglades facility may soon be completely empty after a judge upheld her decision ordering operations there to wind down indefinitely.
Racing to expand the infrastructure necessary for increasing deportations, the federal government and state allies have announced a series of new immigration detention facilities, including the “Speedway Slammer” in Indiana and the “Cornhusker Clink” in Nebraska.
The approximate 400 people the Angola immigration facility will be able to hold is just a tiny percentage of the more than 100,000 people that Ice seeks to detain under a $45bn expansion for immigration detention centers that Trump signed into law in July.
The prison traces its history back to a series of wealthy slave traders and cotton planters who built an operation known as Angola Plantation. An 1850s news report said it had 700 slaves, who historians say were forced to work from dawn to dark in Louisiana’s brutal summer heat.
The plantation became the state prison after the Civil War, with a former Confederate officer awarded a lease that gave him control over the property and its convicts.
“The majority of black inmates were subleased to land owners to replace slaves while others continued levee, railroad, and road construction,” the museum’s website says. White inmates at the time worked as clerks or craftsmen.
Inmate leasing ended in the late 1800s amid a public outcry, and the state took direct control of the prison in 1901.
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Here are the Powerball winning numbers for Wednesday, Sept. 3, 2025

DETROIT – The Powerball drawing on Wednesday night is worth more than $1.4 billion.
The cash option for the jackpot is $634.3 million.
If someone wins the jackpot, it would be the fourth-largest Powerball jackpot ever and the sixth-largest jackpot in U.S. lottery history.
Michigan last saw a Powerball jackpot winner on Jan. 1, 2024. A Mid-Michigan lottery club won an $842.4 million prize with a ticket purchased in Grand Blanc. That remains the largest Powerball prize ever won in Michigan.
Winning Powerball numbers for Sept. 3, 2025
Powerball numbers: 61-29-69-16-03
Powerball: 22
Powerplay multiplier: 2x
How do you play Powerball?
Powerball tickets cost $2 per play. In Idaho and Montana, the game is bundled with Power Play, making the minimum cost $3 per play. They can be purchased at stores across Michigan or online at MichiganLottery.com.
Players select five numbers between 1 and 69 for the white balls, then one number between 1 and 26 for the red Powerball. Numbers can be chosen manually on a play slip or randomly by the lottery terminal.
The jackpot is won by matching all five white balls in any order and the red Powerball.
Drawings take place every Monday, Wednesday, and Saturday at 10:59 p.m. Eastern time at the Florida Lottery draw studio in Tallahassee.
Jackpot winners can choose to receive their prize as an annuity, paid in 30 graduated payments over 29 years, or as a lump sum. Both prize options are before federal and jurisdictional taxes.
Copyright 2025 by WDIV ClickOnDetroit – All rights reserved.
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At least 15 dead in Lisbon funicular accident – DW – 09/04/2025

Emergency services in the Portuguese capital Lisbon said that at least 15 people were killed and 18 injured one Wednesday when one of the city’s iconic yellow Gloria railway cars derailed.
In a statement, the National Institute for Medical Emergencies said that five of the injured were in serious condition, including a child, and that some were foreigners.
According to emergency services, all of the victims have been recovered from the wreckage.
What do we know about the accident?
The famous funicular, which travels up and down a steep street in central Lisbon, is used by locals and tourists alike.
According to eye-witnesses, the railway car hurtled down the hill, apparently out of control, before crashing.
“It hit the building with brutal force and fell apart like a cardboard box,” resident Teresa d’Avo told Portuguese TV channel SIC.
Video and images from the scene showed that the train tipped over and severely damaged, with its sides and roof partially crumpled. It appeared to have crashed into a building where the road bends.
Several dozen emergency workers attended the scene but most were stood down after about two hours.
The Portuguese government said that an investigation into the causes will begin once the rescue operation is over.
Politicians offer condolences
Lisbon Mayor Carlos Moedas called the accident an “unprecedented tragedy” and said that the city was in mourning. The Portuguese government said that a nationwide day of mourning would be held on Thursday.
Portugese President Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa offered his condolences to the affected families.
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen also offered her condolences. “It is with sadness that I learned of the derailment of the famous ‘Elevador da Gloria,'” she wrote in Portuguese on X.
Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez wrote on X that he was “appalled by the terrible accident,” while Italian Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani said he had met with his Portuguese counterpart and expressed his “solidarity with the victims.”
What is the Gloria funicular?
The Gloria funicular, which opened in 1885, connects an area of downtown Lisbon near Restauradores Square to the Bairro Alto (Upper Quarter), which is famous for its vibrant nightlife.
The two cars, which can each carry around 40 people, are attached to opposite ends of a haulage cable, and electric motors on the cars provide the traction.
The Gloria line is one of three funicular lines operated by the municipal public transportation company, Carris, and is used by tourists and local residents alike.
According to the town hall, the Gloria line transports around 3 million people annually.
Edited by: Wesley Dockery
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